Fractal Design has announced the new Celsius series of all-in-one (AiO) liquid CPU coolers that will be available in two models, Celsius S24 and Celsius S36.

The new Fractal Design Celsius series comes with plenty of new features and improvements as well as the 5th generation Asetek liquid cooling technology, joining the likes of Corsair, NZXT, EVGA, Cryorig, Thermaltake and others.

The list of key features for the new Fractal Design Celsius series include a use of premium sound dampening materials integrated into the pump/block unit, with a copper baseplate and ceramic bearing pump. The 240/360 radiator, depending on the version, also got certain improvements with anodized aluminum fins and two/three Fractal Design Dynamic X2 GP12 PWM LLS bearing fans, spinning between 500 and 2000 RPM.

It is obvious that Fractal put a lot of effort into making the Celsius series as silent as possible and it also includes an intelligent temperature-controlled mode and an integrated fan hub on the radiator itself, which should make cable management a bit easier.

As you could have guessed so far, the difference between the two versions of the Celsius series, Celsius S24 and Celsius S36, is only in the size of the radiator, 240mm and 360mm, and the number of fans on that same radiator. The tube length on both units is 400mm and since radiator fittings use standard G1/4" thread, it is also possible to add and integrate a GPU block to the loop.

A few days ago, EVGA officially unveiled its new Closed Loop CPU Cooler (CLC) 120 and 280 liquid coolers that will feature new fans, an ability to sync up with select graphics cards as well as be fully controlled via EVGA Flow Control software.

Showcased back at the CES 2017 show in January, the new EVGA CLC 120/280 liquid coolers promise to bring incredible performance, low noise, robust software controls and RGB lighting, something that is simply everywhere these days.

As you can guess from the names, the EVGA CLC liquid coolers will be available in 120mm and 280mm radiator versions. With support for Intel's LGA 115x and LGA 2011 sockets as well as AMD AM4 socket, the new EVGA CLC liquid coolers feature a completely new and interesting fan design, with a curved housing, unique blade design, and Teflon Nano Bearings, which should all ensure good cooling performance and low noise.

EVGA is also working on the EVGA Flow Control Software that will provide full control over the CLC liquid cooler including, fan speed, pump control, RGB lighting and more. The AMD AM4 bracket will also be available at a later date.

Both versions of the new CLC liquid cooler are available immediately with a price set at US $89.99 for the CLC 120 and US $129.99 for the CLC 280.

Corsair has launched a rather interesting all-in-one (AiO) low-profile liquid CPU cooler aimed to be used with smaller motherboards and PC cases, the Hydro Series H5 SF.

Based on a size that supports any mini-ITX motherboard and with a low height of just 84mm, the new Corsair Hydro Series H5 SF is obviously aimed at SFF and HTPC builds. It also packs quite a punch for its size as it can dissipate up to 150W of heat.

The Hydro H5 SF liquid CPU cooler is based on a copper cold plate with pre-applied thermal compound, a 167x57x40mm aluminum radiator, low permeability tubing and a 120x37mm blower fan that should, according to Corsair, cool both the radiator as well as surrounding components on the motherboard, like the VRM and chipset. The fan spins between 1000 and 1800 RPM, provides between 12 and 24 CFM of airflow and produces between 36 and 42 dBA of noise.

According to Corsair, the new Hybrid Series H5 SF low-profile liquid CPU cooler is compatible with Corsair's Obsidian Series 250D, Carbide Series Air 240 and Graphite Series 380T cases as well as Corsair's Bulldog 4K barebone, for which the Hydro series H5 SF liquid cooler was actually made. According to Corsair's product page, it supports AMD AM2, AM3, FM1 and FM2 sockets as well as Intel's LGA115X and LGA1366 sockets.

The Hydro Series H5 SF low-profile liquid CPU cooler should be available immediately with a suggested retail price of €79.99/US $79.99 exc. tax and backed by a five-year warranty.

Hightech Information Systems, commonly known as the HIS, has announced its newest Radeon R9 series graphics card, the HIS R9 295X2 Liquid Cooler 8GB. Although carrying the fancy name, the new R9 295X2 Liquid Cooler is still based on AMD's reference design with the same hybrid liquid+air cooler co-developed by AMD and Asetek and known as the Project Hydra.

As all other Radeon R9 295X2 graphics cards on the market, the HIS R9 295X2 Liquid Cooler also packs two fully enabled Hawaii XT GPUs with 2816 Stream Processors per GPU as well as 4GB of GDDR5 memory per GPU paired up with a dual 512-bit memory interface. Cooled by dual water blocks/pumps connected to a 120mm radiator the GPUs ended up clocked at 1018MHz while 8GB of GDDR5 memory, cooled together with the VRM and the PLX bridge chip by a center placed fan, ended up clocked at 5.0GHz.

According HIS, the new HIS R9 295X2 Liquid Cooler graphics card will be available in retail/e-tail as of April 21st with a price tag set at US $1,499.

Our friends from Cooler Master Balkans have informed us that their latest Seidon 120M AIO liquid cooler, will be available in Europe as of mid-December.

Previously released in the US, the Seidon 120M is a compact watercooling kit that is factory filled with coolant, sealed and pressure tested. The cooler features a waterblock machined out of a single block of copper to ensure the best possible heat transfer. The waterblock and the pump are connected to a compact 120mm aluminum radiator that can fit in virtually any case, internal or external. Its 120mm rifle bearing PWM fan with a wide RPM range allows fine tuning and balance between noise and performance.

The Seidon 120M supports Intel's LGA 2011/1366/1156/1155/775 sockets as well as AMD's Socket FM1/AM3+/AM3/AM2. As noted, the Seidon 120M is scheduled to appear on European retail/e-tail shelves as of mid-Decemeber with a suggested price tag set at €54.99.

It appears that AMD wants to bundle its latest FX-8120 chip with liquid cooling as well as this one has appeared for pre-order in retail/e-tail for US$310.

The liquid cooling bundle has already been available with AMD's FX-8150 but with a US $384 price tag (and even US $400 on pre-order), it was certainly a bit expensive. Same as the FX-8150, the FX-8120 also packs four Bulldozer modules with two cores per each module for a total of eight cores. It works at 3.1GHz with a 4GHz Turbo and has 8MB (4x2MB) of L2 cache and 8MB of shared L3 cache.

According to the first pre-order price, the FX-8120 bundled with liquid cooling is around US $65-75 cheaper than the FX-8150 boxed with liquid cooler, although the standard boxed FX-8120 is only US $40 cheaper than the the FX-8150.

In case you missed it, the liquid cooler bundled with AMD FX-Series CPUs is made by Asetek.

Of course, this is only a pre-order price and it might be even cheaper once it starts to be available in more shops.

During the IDF 2011 show, Intel showed a rather interesting piece of cooling tech for its upcoming Sandy Bridge E CPUs. Although there were no details regarding the performance of the cooler, sharp eyes of Legitreviews guys spotted it on the show floor.

The only piece of information is that, Termal Solution RTS2011LC as Intel calls its liquid cooler, supports processors with a TDP rationg of up to 130W. As noted, the cooler was developed by Asetek, the guys that have been doing this for quite some time and we have no doubt that they did a very good job.

The design is similar to the one seen on Corsair's liquid coolers except for the slight change in the radiator design, water pump and a fan, and Intel brags that it should provide better cooling that the Corsair H70 with dual-fan design.

According to the guys at Legitreviews, the cooler should be in channel when socket LGA2011 comes out later this year and it will have a price in the US $100 to US $125 range.